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Second Wave Petroleum Inc SCSZF



GREY:SCSZF - Post by User

Post by puntabeachon Apr 03, 2013 5:30pm
271 Views
Post# 21207268

Interview: Crescent's CEO & Waterflood

Interview: Crescent's CEO & Waterflood

The CEO of Crescent Point  expresses his opinion  and  CPG's  big  experience  and  success  in  WATERFLOODS  in  ALL   FORMATIONS  the  last  5   years. The  link  is  below.  FYI,  CPG  started in  early  2013  the  first  waterflood on the  BHL  formation   that  holds  TOGETHER  with  SCS. To  sum  up:

 

SCS    owns    50,000   gross   acres   in   BHL   (40%   WI,  CPG   owns  the  remaining  60%  WI)

SCS   also  owns   10,000    net  acres  (100%   WI)   in  BHL   formation.

SCS   also  owns   100,000    net  acres  (100%   WI)   in  the  shallow  and  LOW  COST   Pekisko  formation  whcih  also  responds  fine  to  Waterflood   as  the  recent  report  proved.  Thus,  CPG   can  use  waterflood  in  SCS    PEKISKO     huge   land     too. 

I  urge  all  those  retail  investors  who  hold  SCS  to  read  this  too  CAREFULLY  and  stop  being  in  DENIAL :

 

 

“A small change of recovery over a large oil field is significant and adds a tremendous amount of value,” says Scott Saxberg, President and CEO of Crescent Point Energy Corp. (TSX: T.CPGStock Forum), arguably seen as the industry leader in the waterflooding revival.

 

“A lot of these unconventional plays (tight oil) are in high decline. By implementing waterfloods, we can lower the declines in the field, and increase reserves. There’s huge value to that.”

 

Crescent Point started waterflooding its properties five years ago when multi-stage fracking (MSF) was new on the scene. Now they have five years of knowledge that the method works, and that they can use it across all of their fields.

 

“We recognized right away to implement a strategy to increase the recovery factorPercentage of oil recoverable vs. what is the Oil Originally In Place on a multi billion barrel pool,” says Saxberg. “If you change even 1%, that ends up being huge.”

“Waterflooding is the next step past in-fill drilling (ie. drilling more holes in less space to increase ultimate recovery). It takes a lot of time to accrue knowledge and data on how to properly implement it. The sooner you start, the better data you have.”

 

According to Saxberg, waterflooding is more than just a cheap way to float balance sheets.

 

Over the course of Crescent Point’s five-year waterflooding program, they’ve developed hundreds of different combinations of waterflooding techniques coupled with fracking techniques, well spacing and plenty of other factors.

 

“Water flooding is basic, in that you pump water into the ground,” says Saxberg. “So to enhance that, you have to look at what type of patterns are in your reservoir. Now these are unconventional tight reservoirs, so the question was, can they actually be water flooded?”

 

Again, the Big Answer is Yes, and management teams are now using the promise of waterfloods as a cheap way to float their balance sheets earlier in a resource play. But Saxberg says waterfloods are truly more long-term value.

 

“They are a long term day-after-day technical grind and process. So it’s not the same as drilling a well and seeing 100bbls/day. It’s a lot of ups and downs and a lot of long term view.”

 

There’s only one negative here that I see—how will all that cheap oil affect North American pricing, when the continent is already swimming in the stuff?

In the short term, the pro-forma economics of waterfloods are making a splash with both management teams and the market.

But medium term and beyond, it will create a quandary for juniors—the easy money comes after huge capital spending.

 
 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Keith Schaefer

Keith Schaefer writes on oil and natural gas markets in a simple, easy to read manner.  His new newsletter, OilandGas-Investments will outline which TSX-listed energy companies have the ability to grow, and bring shareholders prosperity even in these tough times. He has a degree in journalism and has worked for several dailies in Canada, but has spent the last 15 years assisting public resource companies raise exploration and expansion capital.

For consideration in the Oil & Gas Investments news letter please send a confidential email (tips, rumours, research) on www.oilandgas-investments.com or post directly to our message board at: Oil & Gas Investments Bulletin

 

 

 

 

The   link:

 

https://www.stockhouse.com/columnists/2012/aug/14/waterfloods--the-next-big-profit-phase-of-the-shal    

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